海角社区 Boyd Professor Suzanne Marchand Awarded a 2022 Guggenheim Fellowship

April 08, 2022

Suzanne Marchand

海角社区 Boyd Professor of History Suzanne Marchand

鈥 海角社区

BATON ROUGE 鈥 海角社区 Boyd Professor of History Suzanne Marchand has been awarded a prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship for intellectual and cultural history. She is a faculty member in the 海角社区 Department of History. Marchand is among a diverse group of 180 exceptional individuals the Board of Trustees of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation approved as Guggenheim Fellows yesterday. Chosen from a rigorous application and peer review process out of nearly 2,500 applicants, Marchand and this year鈥檚 fellows were appointed on the basis of prior achievement and exceptional promise. 

鈥淒r. Marchand is an exceptional cultural historian whom we are honored to have on the faculty at 海角社区. We are thrilled that her scholarship is being recognized by the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and extend our most heartfelt congratulations to her,鈥 said 海角社区 Vice President of Research & Economic Development Samuel J. Bentley.

Marchand鈥檚 research interests and expertise includes the history of the humanities, especially classical studies, art history, anthropology, history and theology in modern Europe. She was an assistant and then associate professor at Princeton University before joining the 海角社区 faculty in 1999. She is the author of the award-winning book, 鈥淧orcelain: A History from the Heart of Europe,鈥 which chronicles the history of the porcelain industry in Central Europe. 

She is also the author of 鈥淒own from Olympus: Archaeology and Philhellenism in Germany, 1750-1870鈥 (1996) and 鈥淕erman Orientalism in the Age of Empire: Race, Religion, and Scholarship鈥 (2009), which won the George Mosse Prize of the American Historical Association. She has published numerous articles on the history of the humanities, most of which focus on modern Germany and Austria. She is also the coauthor of two textbooks 鈥淲orlds Together, Worlds Apart鈥 (5th ed., 2017) and 鈥淢any Europes鈥 (2013). 

Marchand has received fellowships from the Wissenschaftskolleg, Berlin, the Max Planck Institut f眉r Wissenschaftgeschichte also in Berlin and Harvard鈥檚 Villa I Tatti in Florence. She has received two other fellowships this year which will take her to Berlin and to Princeton. Currently, she is writing a history of Herodotus鈥 reception since 1700, tentatively titled, 鈥淗erodotus and the Instabilities of Western Civilization.鈥 She received her bachelor鈥檚 degree from U.C. Berkeley and both her master鈥檚 and PhD in history from the University of Chicago. 

In all, 51 scholarly disciplines and artistic fields, 81 different academic institutions, 31 states and the District of Columbia and four Canadian provinces are represented in this year鈥檚 class of Fellows.

鈥淭his year marks the Foundation鈥檚 97th annual Fellowship competition. Our long experience tells us what an impact these annual grants will have to change people鈥檚 lives. The work supported by the Foundation will aid in our collective effort to better understand the new world we鈥檙e in, where we鈥檝e come from and where we鈥檙e going. It is an honor for the Foundation to help the Fellows carry out their visionary work,鈥 said Edward Hirsch, president of the Guggenheim Foundation and 1985 Fellow in Poetry. 

Previously awarded Guggenheim Fellows at 海角社区 have included:

Lewis Simpson, English, 1954

Robert C. West, Geography, 1955

William Pryor, Chemistry, 1970

William Cooper, History, 1980

Charles Royster, History, 1982

Rebecca Crump, English, 1983

Michael Book, Art & Design, 1994

Andrew Miksys, Art & Design, 2000

J. Gerald Kennedy, English, 2001

Benjamin Kahan, English and Women's, Gender & Sexuality Studies, 2020

 

To see the full list of 2022 Guggenheim Fellows, visit